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Sixties Sandstorm: The Fight over Establishment of a Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, 1961-1970

Amazon.com Price:  $15.95 (as of 20/04/2019 01:09 PST- Details)

Description

In 1961, Senator Philip Hart of Michigan introduced legislation to add Michigan’s Sleeping Bear Dunes and 77,000 surrounding acres to The united states’s National Park system. The 1,600 people who lived in the proposed park area feared not only that the federal government would confiscate their homes, but that a wave of tourists would ensue and destroy their beloved and fragile lands. In response, they organized citizen action groups and fought a nine-year battle against the legislation.
     Sixties Sandstorm isn’t a book about dunes as much as this can be a book about people and their government. It chronicles the public meetings, bills, protests, and congressional interactions that led to the signing of the Sleeping Bear Sand Dunes Act in 1970. The Dunes park fight is a case study of the politics, the legislative process, citizen response to the expanded role of government in the 1960s, and the upward thrust of the environmental movement in The united states all through that decade. Since Hart’s legislation used to be made law, millions of Americans have traveled to the Sleeping Bear Sand Dunes National Lakeshore. Few believe what the area would look like today if not for the efforts of people like Senator Hart. However, few appreciate the sacrifice of the landowners who–not all the time willingly–gave up their property in this place where, as one resident put it, “stars are closer to the earth than anywhere else on the planet.”
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